Back to Search Start Over

Epilepsy in childhood and school performance: a nation-wide cohort study.

Authors :
Dreier, Julie W
Trabjerg, Betina B
Plana-Ripoll, Oleguer
Skipper, Niels
Agerbo, Esben
Cotsapas, Chris
Berg, Anne T
Christensen, Jakob
Source :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology. Feb2024, Vol. 147 Issue 2, p532-541. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Childhood epilepsy has been linked to poor academic performance, but large-scale studies are lacking. In this nation-wide study of school-aged children, we examined the association between childhood epilepsy and school performance in standardized tests according to phenotypic and treatment-related characteristics. We performed a matched register-based cohort study of children born in Denmark (1997–2009) who participated in the Danish National School Test Programme between 2010 and 2019. We used population and health registers to identify children with epilepsy and a randomly sampled sex- and age-matched reference cohort without epilepsy (ratio 1:10). Norm-based test scores from language and mathematics reflecting performance as a percentile of the nation-wide distribution of scores (scale 1–100) were used to assess academic performance. Adjusted differences in mean standardized scores between children with and without epilepsy were estimated using linear regression models. Among 582 840 children participating in the School Test Programme, we identified 4659 (0.8%) children with epilepsy (52.8% males) and 46 590 matched reference children. Median age at epilepsy onset was 7.5 years (interquartile range: 4.0–10.6). Childhood epilepsy was associated with poorer school performance overall (mean score = 48.2 versus references = 56.7; adjusted difference = −6.7, 95% CI: −7.4 to −6.0), and worse performance was found in all epilepsy subgroups, including in 3534 children with uncomplicated epilepsy (i.e. no other pre-existing neurologic or intellectual disabilities and no identified possible cause for epilepsy; adjusted difference = −6.0, 95% CI: −6.8 to −5.2). No major variation by sex, age or subject was observed, but larger score differences were seen in children using antiseizure medication at time of testing (e.g. valproate monotherapy, adjusted difference = −9.3, 95% CI: −11.5 to −7.0 and lamotrigine monotherapy, adjusted difference = −13.1, 95% CI: −15.0 to −11.3) and in children with psychiatric comorbidity, especially epilepsy with comorbid intellectual disability (adjusted difference = −27.0, 95% CI: −30.0 to −23.9) and epilepsy with comorbid attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (adjusted difference = −15.7, 95% CI: −19.0 to −12.4). Children with epilepsy scored significantly lower than their unaffected siblings (adjusted difference = −6.2, 95% CI: −7.1 to −5.4). In conclusion, childhood epilepsy was associated with impaired academic performance throughout schooling, which suggest that there is a widespread need for educational support of children with epilepsy, even when the child has no other comorbidities and when the epilepsy appears well-managed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00068950
Volume :
147
Issue :
2
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Brain: A Journal of Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175496389
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awad382